Quotes that Make you think

"The purpose of sociology [psychology or anthropology - really, any social science] is to enable the individual to see the everyday - the ordinary and mundane details of life - in a new way; to challenge, as it were, the perceived notions we hold of the world and the institutions and peoples that inhabit it."

- Peter Berger, Sociologist


Common sense is what tells us the Earth is flat and the Sun goes around it. - Anon.


Thursday, September 30, 2010

Poverty in Canada

I was very shocked by hearing that poverty in Canada is increasing. It makes me think how and why this is happening. It also makes me feel thank ful of what I have. But it makes me think if I can do anything to help prevent this to increase even more.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Kevin Carter's Famous Photograph

In March 1993 Kevin Carter took part in an act that is a perfect example of the bystander effect. Carter took a picture that shows a toddler alone and severely emaciated attempting to crawl to an aid station for food, a vulture is standing behind her wating for her to die so it can eat her. Carter waited for 20 minuetes trying to get a perfect picture of the vulture with it’s wings spread. Carter stood there watching the toddler for 20 minuetes while she whimpered and cried but still he did nothing to help her. After he took the picture he scared the volture away and left the child to continue crawling toward the aid station for food without an ounce of help, no one knows what became of the little girl, it is very likey that she starved to death.

My questions would be:
1) Why is it that Kevin Carter did nothing to help the toddler even though he had the perfect chance to?
2) What was going through his mind to make him think that the situation was okay to walk away from?
3) Even if Kevin Carter didn’t want to get involved in the situation why didn’t he call the aid station so they could help the toddler?

The Richmond High School Incident

On October 27th, 2009 a 15 year old girl went to her high school’s homecoming dance. While the dance was taking place in side the gym approximately 10 men gang-raped her for 2 and a half hours. After a while the crowd started to grow to about 20 people watching this happen. No one went to tell the security guard or the policeman on campus at the time. Earlier on the assistant principal looked out his office window and saw 12 to 15 men sitting near the scene (none who appeared to be a teenager) and he didn’t call the police or alert anyone. He returned to his job and ignored them.

This is a perfect example of the bystander effect.
My questions would be
1) What initiated this hostile event?
2) How come no one came to aid this girl? Where were her friends?
3) What made everyone think that it was okay not to do anything about this problem?

14 dead and four critically injured in Bingham, New York

14 dead and four critically injured in Binghamton, New York shooting

A gunman, whom's Identitiy is yet to be released, killed 13 people and wounded four before taking his own life at an upstate New York immigrant counselling centre. The massacre began around 10 am that morning, when the gunman killed two receptionists, and then went at 15 others. A witness said to the press "I heard shots, every shot..no screams, just silence". I would ask this shooter if he had any past history in a facility such as this one, or if he head any issues with the flow of immigrants arriving in the area. There would have had to be a massive event or ongoing issue connecting this man to such a specific location, and such specific targets. I may also ask him what made him believe that murdering 13 people was neccessary, and why he killed himself in the end.

Chad Kroger-Drunk Drving

In 2008, in British Columbia Chad Kroger was sentenced a year of driving prohibition and was fined $690 for drunk driving. His blood alcohol level had been found to be twice the legal limit and was speeding in his Lamborgini. When the police officer pulled him over the officer had asked for his driving lisciense but instead Kroger handed him his VISA card.

Do you think his punishment was fair compared to non-celebrities?

Philip Markoff: Craigslist killing

In April 2009 Philip Markoff was accused for the murder of New York native Julissa Brisman. The pair met on craigslist through an erotic services advertisement. Brisman was hit in the head with a gun barrel and then shot three times at close range. Officials found a gun with 2 blood stains on it in Markoff's apartment making him the prime suspect. Markoff was also held suspect to the armed robbery of a women from Las Vegas and for a attacking a stripper all in that same week.

So the question I would ask Mr. Markoff is what happened?

What terrible thing happened that made a former medical student at the university of Boston attack three women in one week? The question will unfotunately never be answered because Markoff commited suicide in jail on August 15th while awaiting his trial.

Man charged in collision that killed mother, injured child

At 11pm, a crash occured when a Mercedes SUV travelling northbound on Hwy. 27 collided with a Honda Civic as it turned onto southbound Hwy. 27. The Civic was carrying a family of four, including the woman’s 33-year-old husband and their two young children. The crash killed the 29-year-old mother and sent her 6-year-old daughter to hospital with life-threatening injuries. Police said the mother was sitting in the back seat of the car, which had considerable damage. The back left tire was found lying about 60 metres from the car. Another relative was travelling behind the Civic when the accident happened, but was not involved in the crash. Police arrested the 45-year-old driver of the Mercedes for failing to remain at the scene of the crash. They say he attempted to flee the scene on foot. He is facing multiple charges, including at least one related to impaired driving.

The questions I would ask would be:

#1) What other car crashes or incidents had the 45-year-old man (driving the Mercedes) been in before?

#2) Had the 45-year-old man been intoxicated during the time that the crash occured?

#3) Had there been any other encounters between the people in the crash?

#4) What was the reason for the 45-year-old man to flee the crime?

Laura Szendrei's Murder

On September 25th, 15 year-old Laura Szendrei was walking through an open park in her hometown of Delta B.C, just south of Vancouver. It was a recreational park in broad daylight (rroughly 12p.m.), but at that time, Laura was attacked (no more details reeleased). She died later in hospital surrounded by her family.
Laura was, as described by family and friends, a "happy smiling young girl". Her life was cut short.
Was Laura involved with any shady people? Was this a planned meeting on Sunday morning?
Was Laura mentally stable? Was she troubled or just a happy teenager? Was she just in the wrong place at the wrong time?
Also, police are working to see if any ties can be made between the death of Laura and two other attacks on women in the same area earlier this month. Her death is very troubling, and police and family and friends are working to bring the murderer to justice.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Assault of Toronto man turns deadly

On Saturday June 12th, a man named Terry Rideout was assaulted near Lake Shore Boulevard West and Islington Ave. Jason Miller was charged with aggravated assault and assault with a weapon. The homicide squade has now taken over the investigation.

Question One: Did they have any recent encounters that would make them not like each other (was there a motive)?

Question Two: Did Jason Miller have any prior assaults?

Question Three: Was Terry Rideout of any race that he would be a target?

Woman shot yet gunman kept firing

Recently in Toronto, a man was caught shooting around near a building, and accidentally shot a 37 year old female. A bystander was watching and yelled, "you just shot a girl", repeatedly. According to the gunman, Weese, he "didn't hear was he was saying" and continued to shoot the woman. The 27 year old man has pleaded not guilty to first degree murder and four counts of aggravated assault. My questions would be:

1. Does Weese have a history of violence?
2. How educated is Mr. Weese?
And finally, 3. Does Mr. Weese know the woman personally/have they had a history together?

The Murder of Reena Virk and Trials of Kelly Ellard

I would like to draw your attention to a disturbing case that occurred a few years ago. There is a book and movie depicting the horror of this crime.

On November 14, 1997, Reena Virk, a 14 year old girl, was swarmed and beaten to death under a bridge in Saanich on Vancouver Island, B.C. by a group of teenagers, mainly 7 girls and one boy (14-16 yrs.). Police found her body eight days later in Victoria's Gorge waterway. Reena Virk was a Sikh girl and a Jehovah's Witness who rebelled against her family's strict religious beliefs. She eventually became estranged from her family and spent a few days in a foster home where she came into contact with local gang culture.

Why did this gang brutally bully and murder Reena Virk? Was this a racially motivated hate crime? Is girl gang violence on the rise in Canada and elsewhere?

Six girls were sentenced in 1998 for their roles in the initial beatings. Warren Glowatski was convicted of second degree murder a year later and in 2000, Kelly Ellard was also convicted of second degree murder.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Drunk Driving causes Death

Recently a man from Red Deer was charged with driving under the influence causing death. This man has been charged with 32 seperate charges and is appearing in court soon to face the main charge of killing a 13 year old boy. If I could ask this man one question I would ask what was he thinking when he left where ever he was drunk did he believe he would take a life and ruin his own, or was he stable did he drink all the time and commit DUI often.

Rahim Jaffer

Rahim was a a former MP who got caught driving under the influence, while the cops were searching his car they had discovered cocaine, and he was charged. The media took this as a juicy story and soon after the public knew all about it. Rahim's wife said it was an embarrassment and didn't want everyone knowing. If I were to ask Rahim a question about this event, I would ask him if he wouldn't have been drunk driving and have possession of cocaine if he had known that everyone would know about it. I would ask him if he is embarrassed, and would this embarrassment teach him a lesson, or just anger him?

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Kitty Genovese


Please read the Kitty Genovese storty below, and complete the inquirysequence found on the To Do page.

The Kitty Genovese Story
A Modern Parable



Extract for Story by By Mark Gado for the True Crime Library http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial_killers/predators/kitty_genovese/

Prologue

During the 1960s, when there was no shortage of drama in the nation’s courtrooms, one murder case stood alone in its ability to shock the country. The crime was not as gruesome as some others, since many more were just as violent, and still more that easily surpassed it. The victim was an ordinary working girl, not at all wealthy and not a member of any elite class. Her name was Catherine Genovese, the 28-year-old daughter of Italian-American parents. But to millions of people who read her story when it first appeared in New York City’s press, she would forever be remembered as “Kitty” Genovese. What happened to her, what happened to all of society on that dreadful night in the spring of 1964, would reverberate across the country and generate a national soul-searching that is reserved for only the most catastrophic of events. And nearly 40 years later, her name has become synonymous with a dark side of an urban character that, for many people, represents a harsh and disturbing reality of big city life.

During the 1940s and into the 1950s, the Genovese family lived and worked in Brooklyn, New York. In the 1940s Catherine’s father, Vincent A. Genovese started his own business of supplying coats and aprons to local businesses. It was called the Bay Ridge Coat and Apron Supply Company. He became moderately successful, and in 1954 he and his wife Rachel decided to move to New Canaan, Connecticut. The decision came shortly after Rachel had witnessed a shooting near their home. By that time, they had five children, the oldest being Catherine, who was 19. But she chose to remain behind in New York and stick it out while the rest of the family moved to the suburbs.

Catherine was an attractive, outgoing woman who liked Latin American music and loved to dance. A graduate of Brooklyn’s Prospect Heights High School in 1954, she was also interested in history and politics and could debate on many issues. “I remember that she loved to talk politics and knew a great deal about what was going on,” said her younger brother, Bill Genovese, recently. “She was a Renaissance woman, interested in a lot of different subjects,” he said.

By 1963, she had moved to Queens. She rented an apartment located on the second floor of a commercial building on Austin Street in the Kew Gardens section of Queens, a quiet, mostly residential area. She shared her space with a girlfriend, Mary Ann Zielonko. Catherine later got a job as a bar manager in Ev’s Eleventh Hour Club, a small neighborhood tavern on Jamaica Avenue and 193rd Street in the Hollis section of the borough. The bar was about five miles from her apartment, and she drove her red Fiat to the restaurant nearly every night. She worked late, sometimes into the early morning hours. It made her nervous to return to her apartment in the dark, but it was something that could not be avoided and being a city girl her whole life, Catherine had the typical resiliency and determination of a native New Yorker.

A Cry in the Night

Along a serene, tree-lined street in the Kew Gardens section of Queens, New York City, Catherine Genovese began the last walk of her life in the early morning hours of March 13, 1964. She had just left work, and it was 3:15 a.m. when she parked her red Fiat in the Long Island Railroad parking lot 20 feet from her apartment door at 82-70 Austin Street. As she locked her car door, she took notice of a figure in the darkness walking quickly toward her. She became immediately concerned as soon as the stranger began to follow her. “As she got out of the car she saw me and ran,” the man told the court later, “I ran after her and I had a knife in my hand.” She must have thought that since the entrance to her building was so close, she would reach safety within seconds. But the man was faster than she thought. At the corner of Austin Street and Lefferts Boulevard, there was a police call box, which linked directly to the 112th Precinct. She may have changed direction to call for assistance, but it was too late. The man caught up with Catherine, who was all of 5’1” and weighed just 105 pounds, near a street light at the end of the parking lot.

“I could run much faster than she could, and I jumped on her back and stabbed her several times,” the man later told cops.

“Oh my God! He stabbed me!” she screamed. “Please help me! Please help me!” Some apartment lights went on in nearby buildings. Irene Frost at 82-68 Austin Street heard Catherine’s screams plainly. “There was another shriek,” she later testified in court, “and she was lying down crying out.” Up on the seventh floor of the same building, Robert Mozer slid open his window and observed the struggle below.

“Hey, let that girl alone!” he yelled down into the street. The attacker heard Mozer and immediately walked away. There was quiet once again in the dark. The only sound was the sobbing of the victim, struggling to her feet. The lights in the apartment went out again. Catherine, bleeding badly from several stab wounds, managed to reach the side of her building and held onto the concrete wall. She staggered over to a locked door and tried to stay conscious. Within five minutes, the assailant returned. He stabbed her again. “I’m dying! I’m dying!” she cried to no one. But several people in her building heard her screams. Lights went on once again and some windows opened. Tenants tried to see what was happening from the safety of their apartments.

The attacker then ran to a white Chevy Corvair at the edge of the railroad parking lot and seemed to drive away. On the sixth floor of 82-40 Austin Street, Marjorie and Samuel Koshkin witnessed the attack from their window. “I saw a man hurry to a car under my window,” he said later. “He left and came back five minutes later and was looking around the area.” Mr. Koshkin wanted to call the police, but Mrs. Koshkin thought otherwise. “I didn’t let him,” she later said to the press. “I told him there must have been 30 calls already.” Miss Andre Picq, a French girl, who lived on the second floor, heard the commotion from her window. “I heard a scream for help, three times,“ she later told the court, “I saw a girl lying down on the pavement with a man bending down over her, beating her.”

At about 3:25 a.m., Catherine, bleeding badly, stumbled to the rear of her apartment building and attempted to enter through a back entrance. The door was locked. She slid along the wall until she reached a hallway leading to the 2nd floor of 82-62 Austin Street but she fell to the vestibule floor. In the meantime, the man had returned again. “I came back because I knew I’d not finished what I set out to do,” he told cops later. He walked along the row of doors and calmly searched for the woman. He checked the first door and didn’t find her. He followed the trail of blood to the doorway where Catherine lay bleeding on the tiled floor. And there, while the defenseless victim lay semiconscious, incoherent from pain and loss of blood, he cut off her bra and underwear and sexually assaulted her. He then took $49 in cash from her wallet. “Why would I throw money away?” he asked the court at his trial. As Catherine moaned at his feet, probably unable to comprehend what had happened to her, the man viciously stabbed her again and killed her.

The man, who had selected his victim purely at random, ran to his car still parked where he left it. The entire event lasted at least 32 minutes. He said later that murder “was an idea that came into my mind, just as an idea might come into your mind, but I couldn’t put mine aside.” He jumped into his white sedan and fled the scene. A few blocks away, he came to a red light. He glanced over at the car idling next to him and saw that a man was asleep behind the wheel. The killer got out of his car and awakened the sleeping driver. He told the man he should go home. Then the killer, full of himself, $49 richer and not at all ashamed of what he had done, got back into his own car and drove off into the night.

Catherine was his third murder.

Thirty-Eight

At about 3:50 a.m., a neighbor, Karl Ross, who lived on the second floor of Catherine’s building on Austin Street, finally called the police. But before he did, he called a friend in nearby Nassau County and asked his opinion about what he should do. After the police were notified, a squad car arrived within three minutes and quickly found Catherine’s body in the hallway on the first floor. She had been stabbed 17 times. Her torn and cut clothes were scattered about and her open wallet lay on the floor next to her. Her driver’s license identified her as Catherine Genovese. Detectives from the 112 responded and began an exhaustive investigation. It was a frigid, winter morning, and a brisk, unrelenting wind made it seem even colder. A canvass of the neighborhood turned up several witnesses, including the one who had notified the police. When cops finished polling the immediate neighborhood, they discovered at least 38 people who had heard or observed some part of the fatal assault on Kitty Genovese.

Kew Gardens is a residential area located at the center of the borough of Queens,

one of the most populated communities in America. If Queens were a city, it would be America’s fifth largest. The area of Kew Gardens is generally middle class where houses in 1964 typically sold for $30,000 to $50,000. It resembled a small village in the suburbs rather than a city neighborhood. Mostly white, working class and typically one of the hundreds of small communities that make up metropolitan New York City, Austin Street is the focal point of the neighborhood. On this neat, picturesque avenue, there are shops, a small park and a busy train station where commuters catch the Long Island Rail Road to Grand Central, 15 minutes away. Not the kind of place where one would think a person could be murdered without anyone offering even a smidgen of assistance.

“We thought it was a lover’s quarrel!” said one tenant. “Frankly, we were afraid,” said another witness. One woman who didn’t want her name used said, “I didn’t want my husband to get involved.” Others had different explanations for their conduct. “We went to the window to see what was happening, but the light from our bedroom made it difficult to see the street.”

There were lots of excuses. Maybe the most apathetic was the one who told reporters, “I was tired.” But the fact remained that dozens of people stood by and watched a woman being brutally assaulted for an extended period of time, and did nothing.

“If we had been called when he first attacked, the woman might not be dead now,” an assistant chief inspector told the press at the time. New York City Deputy Police Commissioner Walter Arm said, “This tendency to shy away from reporting crimes is a common one.” That was a revelation to the public. Some detectives were stunned. Others simply saw the unwillingness to get involved as representative of the times. Apathy, especially in urban settings, was everywhere, not only in Kew Gardens. In her own defense, one neighbor said she was too afraid to call. “I tried …I really tried,“ she said, “but I was gasping for air and was unable to talk into the telephone.”

As killings go, the murder of Catherine Genovese was not a spectacular one, nor did it generate much publicity when it happened. The original NYCPD complaint report reduced the episode to just five typewritten lines:

“Karl Ross…heard calls of help at his residence. He saw a woman later identified as Kitty Genovese F-W-28 lying face down in ground floor hallway, she was taken to QGH (Queens General Hospital) by… with multiple stab wounds and pronounced DOA…then taken to morgue.”

There were hundreds of killings in New York City in 1964 and 9,360 murders in America that year. A random killing in the street was not big news. The New York Times delegated a few short paragraphs to the incident on page 12. For two weeks, it lay dormant and gathered virtually no public attention. It wasn’t until March 27, when The Times published its famous “37 Who Saw Murder Didn’t Call” article by Martin Gansberg, that the killing became big news. The New York City media picked up on the wider themes of the event. Camera crews and newscasters descended on Kew Gardens. The press searched the neighborhood for any scrap of uncovered information, no matter how small or insignificant. Kitty Genovese’s story began to take shape.

Investigation

During the week after the murder, the 30 detectives who were assigned to the case sifted through the neighborhood of Kew Gardens and Forest Hills. They located a milkman who was able to furnish a description of a suspect. Others also had observed Catherine’s killer in the area prior to the murder and were able to add to the description. But it wasn’t until six days later, when a suspect was arrested stealing a television during a house burglary that cops had their man: Winston Moseley, 29.

Moseley had no criminal record. He was married, owned a home in Queens and had two kids. Slight of build, barely 5-foot-8, with thin features and a brooding appearance, Moseley was a machine operator who worked in Mt. Vernon in nearby Westchester County. His arrest report, dated March 19, 1964, lists his occupation as “Remington Rand tab operator.” He did not seem to be the type of person who committed street muggings or murder. But Moseley quickly confessed to the Genovese killing and two others. He told cops he had killed Barbara Kralik, 15, on July 20 in Springfield Gardens, Queens, and shot Annie Mae Johnson, 24, of South Ozone Park, Queens, on February 29. Both were savage killings and may have involved sexual assault. Trouble was, another man named Alvin “The Monster” Mitchell, 18, a local gang member, was already in custody for the Kralik killing. He had allegedly also confessed to the teenager’s murder. But Moseley was insistent. He had killed them all, he said.

In the murder of Annie Mae Johnson, Moseley insisted that he shot the victim several times. “I shot her in the stomach. I reloaded and shot

her again in the stomach,” he told cops. But the autopsy on Johnson had listed the cause of death as puncture wounds from a sharp object such as a screwdriver or a file. Based on Moseley’s confession, the body was exhumed from a cemetery in Monck’s Corner, South Carolina, and a second autopsy was performed. Using X-ray equipment borrowed from a South Carolina Medical College in Charleston, the coroner found six bullets inside Johnson’s body. Four of these bullets were recovered. “The finding of these bullets adds a lot of credence to Winston Moseley’s other statements,” Queens District Attorney Frank O’Connor told the press.

In the murder of 15-year-old Barbara Kralik, there was blood evidence available, no test yet existed that could compare bodily fluids for conclusive DNA identification. Moseley, however, was able to supply details that conformed to the existing evidence. Cops were satisfied they had the right man. Even his own court-appointed attorney, Sydney G. Sparrow, believed Moseley. “I’m convinced Moseley did all three of these killings,” he told reporters after he met with his client for three hours in the Kings County Psych Ward. “There are too many things he knew that only the killer could know,” he added.

But there was more. Moseley confessed to other attacks during nighttime expeditions in which he would roam the streets searching for victims at random. He said he raped many women, frequently robbing them in the process. Moseley admitted to dozens of burglaries, including the one for which he was arrested when he was caught stealing a television. But it was the sexual assaults that had detectives interested. Particularly the failed attempts of rape which several women reported. Moseley, it seemed, preferred sex with the dead. Dr. Oscar Diamond, a psychiatrist from Manhattan State Hospital, performed a pretrial psychiatric examination of Moseley. “He told me he got no thrill with live women he raped,” he told the court later.

The Kitty Genovese Syndrome

By mid-April, the Kitty Genovese story had taken hold and the nation began a lengthy period of analysis and self-deprecation. Why would civilized people turn away from another human being in dire need of assistance? As the details of the killing emerged, it became plain that if any one of the 38 witnesses had simply called the police at the first sign of trouble, the victim could have survived. The initial stab wounds inflicted may not have been fatal. Timely medical treatment could have saved the life of Catherine Genovese.

Were the witnesses really that cold-hearted? People wondered. Some psychologists blamed television for the sad state of affairs in Kew Gardens. In a symposium held in Manhattan’s Barbizon Plaza Hotel in early April 1964, psychiatrist Ralph S. Banay said television was at least partly to blame. “We underestimate the damage that these accumulated images do to the brain,” he said, “The immediate effect can be delusional, equivalent to a sort of post-hypnotic suggestion.” The witnesses became confused, and paralyzed by the violence they witnessed outside their window, he explained. “They were fascinated by the drama, by the action, and yet not entirely sure that what was taking place was actually happening,” he said. That explanation fit in neatly with what some of the witnesses had told police. They claimed that when they saw the disturbance on Austin Street, they imagined it was an argument between man and wife or boyfriend and girlfriend. None really thought that they were witnessing a real killing. “We thought it was a lover’s quarrel,” one witness said later. Another neighbor repeated that assertion when he said, “I thought they were some kids having some fun!” Others complained of the media attention and said the press made the neighborhood look bad. “These things happen every day all over the world,” one neighbor told a reporter, “The stories were only giving us a black eye!”

Dr. Karl Menninger, a world-renowned psychiatrist and founder of the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kansas, also spoke at the symposium. “Public apathy to crime is itself a manifestation of aggressiveness,” he told the audience. People turn away for a variety of reasons, including their desire “not to get involved.”

But were people in big cities more apathetic, colder and indifferent than others in more rural environments? Or was the “Kitty Genovese Syndrome,” as some psychologists characterized it, indicative of society as a whole?

One dynamic brought forth was the Bystander Effect. This theory speculates that as the “number of bystanders increases, the likelihood of any one bystander helping another decreases.” As a result, additional time will pass before anyone seeks outside help for a person in distress. Another hypothesis is something called the Diffusion of Responsibility. This is simply a decrease in the feeling of personal responsibility one feels when in the presence of many other people. The greater the number of bystanders, the less responsibility the individual feels. In cases where there are many people present during an emergency, it becomes much more likely that any one individual will simply do nothing.

In essence, the 38 witnesses felt no responsibility to act because there were so many witnesses. Each one felt that the other witness would do something. Social psychology research supports the notion that Catherine Genovese had a better chance of survival if she had been attacked in the presence of just one witness.


Websites providing more information on the By-Stander Effect:

http://changingminds.org/explanations/theories/bystander_effect.htm

Includes other experiments such a this one by: Latané and Darley, who sat a series of college students in a cubicle amongst a number of other cubicles in which there were tapes of other students playing (the student thought they were real people). One of the voices cries for help and makes sounds of severe choking. When the student thought they were the only person there, 85% rushed to help. When they thought there was one other person, this dropped to 65%. And when they thought there were four other people, this dropped again to 31%.

http://www.safety-council.org/info/community/bystander.html

(Canada Safety Council also provides a good explanation of the theory, and tips about how to stay safe)

Thursday, September 16, 2010

My Expression on "What Do You Think?"

I was very shocked that all of the answers were false, especially the one about children with divorced parents having difficulties at school. I thought that the troubles at home would be revealed through misfortunes in their schoolwork, but I was mistaken.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Great Work - Stats Canada

Hi Everyone,

Very pleased with your many posts. You will note I've commented on all those posted. Please don't forget to label all your posts.

I have also included several RSS Feeds from Statistics Canada, Canada's National Statistical Agency. The feeds cover Aboriginal affairs (great when studying culture), demographics (the study of population change), culture and leisure, and one feed that has links to all the news and articles published by the organization, including "Crime," "Youth," and "Society and Culture". When you've a moment, check them out.

Crime in Toronto

I was suprised that all of the questions were false, especially the one about crime in toronto. I thought the crime rate was defenitely on the rise.

What I Think.

I didnt realize that people would still commit severe crimes even though there is capatal punishment. The consiquence of death would change my thought of whatever is being done in a heartbeat.

Dreams-What I think.

I always found the concept of human dreams or dreams in general to be quite an amazing topic. How the brain can generate a whole world and fill it with ideas and people. I would enjoy studying dreams in more depth this year and how they fully work and what effects them.

My Opinion

I was surprised to find out that the violent crime is decreasing in Canada. With all these new problems in the world, and how the media acts - changing the attitudes of many - I would've expected that the crime would go up. Now thatv i think about it, the news does not seem to focus on crime in Canada very much - probably because there is not a lot to report. They focus more on international crime or issues.

What i think on the true and false questions

I was a little surprised that all of them where false. For the most part I had guessed false but for example, i thought that (#4) Poverty is decerasing in Canada, but the answer was false. That really surprised me because i thought Canada was getting better at everyone being equal, but that was not true.

True or False

I think that some of the questions were contrivercial depending on the way you looked at it. For example the dream question, some people believe they don't dream because they don't remember so in that sense the answer is true.

My Thoughts

For the most part, there weren't many shockers. I knew, but didn't really want to believe, that poverty was on the rise in Canada. We are having more and more people come to Canada, not able to find work because they were trained differently or they are unable to join the work force in higher paying jobs. More people with fewer jobs, means that poverty must be rising. It is good to know, though, that in spite of growing poverty, violent crimes are in decline.

unexpected results

I was suprised by some of the questions, answers. I did not expect that in some societys women are dominant over men.

Surprising Discoveries to Thought-Provoking Questions

In my opinion, this exercise was a fantastic way to brainstorm and consider our thoughts from a variety of different perspectives. It was quite surprising that all of the answers were false, particularily the question "do opposites attract?" because I never really thought about it in detail, but life pathways actually tend to draw people together based on common ground.

unexpected answers

I was suprised by the answer that men have not always been dominant over women. I did not expect that in some societys women are dominant over men. I have always thought that throughout history men have always been dominant in politics, in the household at work ect.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Michael Bryant's Deadly Duel

As you know from our last discussion, Michael Bryant, one of Canada's rising political stars was charged with manslaughter, following the death of Allan Shepherd. You were asked to follow up with the story, and find out what happened. Should you need a reminder of the thestar.com's article please use this link
http://www.thestar.com/article/689771 Your task is now to "comment" on the case, by answering the question: Why do you think the events that transpired from a social scientists point of view?

Once you've posted your comment, you must then find a story of your own, and create a "posting," which provides some information on the case, and what questions if you were on the scene as either an anthropologist, psychologist or sociologist (you choose), you'd like to ask.

Please wait for intructions before attempting to post.